Hawaii’s Population Drain Outpaces Most States — Again
Even as the state has more people being born than dying, Hawaii’s population continues to decline as people leave the state for less expensive pastures.
A few years ago, despite the nation鈥檚 lowest unemployment rate, Hawaii was one of the few states that lost population: a situation so striking that a national newspaper described it with the headline, 鈥溾
The population decline has continued in the islands, but in 2020-2021, Hawaii was no longer mostly alone. It was one of 17 states and the District of Columbia with a net loss of residents.
The bad news: Hawaii lost more residents than all but three other states.
That, says University of Hawaii housing economist Philip Garboden, 鈥渋s not where we want to be.鈥
Peter Ho, chairman and chief executive of Bank of Hawaii, put it more bluntly. He said Hawaii鈥檚 population decline reflects a hollowing out of the state鈥檚 middle class, which he calls 鈥渁n existential economic issue for the state.鈥
In order to remain strong, Ho said, an economy needs productivity and a growing population, which leads to a larger workforce.
“You’ve got to have one of those conditions to have a vibrant economy,” he said.
What鈥檚 worse, the problems driving people out of the state involve a broad range of things, none of which is easy to solve, says Carl Bonham, executive director of the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization.
鈥淭here isn鈥檛 one solution,鈥 he said. 鈥淥r we would have already tackled it.鈥
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In sheer numbers, Hawaii鈥檚 recent population loss might not seem big. From July 2020 to July 2021, the state lost 10,358 residents, according to latest data from the U.S. Census Bureau. But as a percentage of population, it was a 0.7% loss; only Washington, D.C., New York and Illinois lost more people as a percentage.
In addition, Hawaii should have gained population because births outpaced deaths 15,510 to 11,279 during the period, creating what should have been a 4,231-person increase. This means about 14,500 people left the state in 2020-2021.
Combine that with losses from previous years, and, Bonham says, Hawaii has lost 30,000 residents.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 basically the entire change in the workforce,鈥 Bonham said. Hawaii’s civilian labor force had about 650,000 workers in November compared with 675,700 in February 2020, before the coronavirus聽 pandemic started.
The Hawaii Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism took a hard look at the demographics of those leaving Hawaii and quantified what many people had seen anecdotally: that Hawaii鈥檚 best and brightest young people were leaving.
Tilted the study by DBEDT economist Wayne Liou found that kamaaina 鈥渓eaving for the mainland are both younger and more educated.鈥
For instance, the study found that almost 15% of Hawaii-born people living on the mainland are between the ages of 18 and 44 and have a bachelor鈥檚 degree or higher, compared to 7.7% of those remaining in Hawaii. Another finding: in sheer numbers, there are more Hawaii-born people with a bachelor鈥檚 degree or higher living on the mainland than there are who stayed in the state.
鈥淭hus, brain drain of young, educated working-age adults appears to be non-trivial,鈥 Liou wrote.
'Brain Gain'
State government has taken some steps to address the issue by creating more economic opportunities for residents. In September 2020, DBEDT's director, Mike McCartney, said he believed the state could create 38,000 new remote-work jobs in a year. To that end, the state launched the , a pilot program meant to connect Hawaii residents and out-of-state employers.
But it seems Hawaii isn鈥檛 close to reaching McCartney鈥檚 vision. While the state recovered some 70,000 jobs in the year after McCartney鈥檚 announcement, some 40,000 were in food service and accommodations and another 5,000 in retail, according to UHERO data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The bureau doesn鈥檛 report on remote workers as an industry.
The private sector is also stepping up. Nicole Lim is the director of , a program designed to attract, integrate and retain talented workers, especially returning kamaaina.
Lim herself is a kamaaina who returned, an Iolani School graduate who went on to earn degrees from Yale and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania before going to work as a management consultant and as a senior manager for eBay.
Lim had shed the corporate life and was traveling the world teaching yoga and doing leadership training when her mother interrupted a trip to Patagonia and 鈥渧oluntold鈥 her to come back home as Covid-19 was engulfing the planet.
鈥淲hen your mom voluntells you to come home in the middle of a pandemic, you鈥檙e kind of like, 鈥極K, I guess I鈥檓 coming home,鈥欌 she said.
Lim landed the job as Movers and Shakas鈥 director after writing an op-ed piece expressing on recruiting people from elsewhere to work remotely in Hawaii.
The very existence of Movers and Shakas shows how concerned Hawaii's business elite are about the state's population loss. The organization鈥檚 parent is the , a business organization chaired by Hawaii entrepreneur Duane Kurisu, whose ventures include magazines like Hawaii Business and Honolulu, radio stations and restaurants in Honolulu and San Jose. He's also a minority owner of the San Francisco Giants baseball team.
The collaborative鈥檚 other board members are Micah Kane, president of the Hawaii Community Foundation; John Dean, chairman emeritus of Central Pacific Financial Corp; and Ray Vara, chief executive of Hawaii Pacific Health.
Since taking over, Lim has reshaped Movers and Shakas in key ways. The organization鈥檚 30-day flagship 鈥淐ohort Fellow Program鈥 for remote workers now seeks especially to connect to returning kamaaina.
Movers and Shakas soon will launch another initiative called the Hawaii Talent Onboarding Program. The goal is to help talented newcomers adapt to Hawaii鈥檚 unique culture and avoid leaving after a few years. As Lim describes it, in part this is practical, to avoid the employee churn that鈥檚 costly and frustrating for businesses needing to recruit talent from elsewhere. But Lim鈥檚 vision runs deeper.
鈥淭he overall goal is really brain gain,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ow to tie people into Hawaii for the good of Hawaii.鈥
With only 50 fellows per cohort, Movers and Shakas will not offset the thousands of people fleeing Hawaii each year. But Lim said the organization's fellows will contribute to the community.
"It's really about finding needle movers who can have a large impact," she said.
And as Bank of Hawaii's Ho described it, the type of people Movers and Shakas is targeting -- talented, productive workers -- are key to Hawaii's economy.
While healthy retirees moving to the state and buying real estate boost Hawaii's economy, Ho said, they aren't the same as younger people moving here, building companies, raising families and doing community service.
"The middle class really punches over their weight economically," he said.
鈥Hawaii鈥檚 Changing Economy鈥 is supported by a grant from the as part of its CHANGE Framework project.
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About the Author
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Stewart Yerton is the senior business writer for 天美视频. You can reach him at syerton@civilbeat.org.